Draft of 28 July 2013 Gary Schaub, Jr. and Henrik Ø. Breitenbach

Toward Multinational Professional Military Education in Europe

Gary Schaub, Jr. and Henrik Ø. Breitenbach

Centre for Military Studies

University of Copenhagen

Presented to the Annual Joint Meeting of the International Security Studies Section of the International Studies Association and the International Security and Arms Control Section of the American Political Science Association in Washington, D.C., 4-6 October 2013.

Abstract

European NATO nations need better staff officers. Operation Unified Protector exposed a widespread deficiency in the professional knowledge of field-grade European officers. Professional military education (PME) is where corrective Alliance action must focus. The Nordic countries—Norway, Denmark, Sweden, and Finland—have conducted joint training courses for decades and are considering ways to facilitate cooperation in the education of the field-grade officers that would populate the staff of any future NATO-led expeditionary operation. We suggest three alternative paths that increased cooperation in PME at the level of the command and staff course could take: a Nordic Defence College, standardized national command and staff courses, and a core curriculum of common courses for common purposes. We conclude with a discussion of how the Alliance can facilitate clusters of cooperation between strategically proximate groups of Allies to improve their number of knowledgeable and skilled staff officers.

Introduction: Toward Multinational Professional Military Education

NATO Unified Protector

In March 2011, NATO undertook air and maritime operations protect civilians and rebellious forces from the regime of Muammar Gaddafi. Operation Unified Protector resembled Operation Allied Force, where NATO undertook similar air and maritime actions to protect Kosovar civilians and rebellious forces in March 1999. Unified Protector revealed vast improvements in the ability of European Allies to contribute to operations: 90 percent of all precision munitions dropped and 61 percent of sorties in Kosovo were American compared to 10 percent of precision munitions and 25 percent of sorties in Libya.[1] In many ways, NATO members demonstrated that they had corrected previous capability shortcomings.

Still, most analyses of Unified Protector have focused on remaining hardware deficiencies. “Without U.S. Tomahawk cruise missiles, drones, and electronic warfare aircraft to guide combat missions, the Libya intervention would have been extremely difficult and probably would not have succeeded,” concluded a RAND assessment.[2] The United States supplied 75 percent of air-refueling, 75 percent of the intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance data, and had to replenish rapidly depleted allied stocks of precision munitions.[3] Although many allies wanted to do more, “the military capabilities simply aren’t there,” Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said at the time.[4] Making the appropriate investments to correct for such shortfalls in a time of austerity presents a well-understood challenge.[5]

Less attention has been devoted to the personnel deficiencies that hampered operations. “[T]he alliance has failed to devote the necessary resources to developing key skills, including the capacity to find and engage the types of mobile targets common in contemporary operations, plan joint operations in parallel with fast-paced political decision-making, support the targeting process with legal advice, and provide timely and reliable information on operational developments to the public,” argued U.S. Ambassador to NATO Ivo Daalder and SACEUR Admiral James Stavridis. “U.S. commanders in Europe had to quickly dispatch over 100 military personnel to the NATO targeting center at the outset of the intervention when it became clear that other member states lacked the knowledge and expertise to provide their aircraft with the correct targeting information.”[6] Indeed, “[s]everal Nations reported that personnel assigned to fill staff positions in support of OUP often lacked pre-requisite training and/or experience resulting in a mismatch of people and skills required, and that there was a reduced effectiveness of OUP Headquarters due to the frequent rotation of some assigned personnel.”[7] The “chaotic transfer of command” from the United States to NATO and staff shortfalls halved the ability of NATO aircraft to carry out strike sorties—a real impact on operational effectiveness.[8]

European NATO nations need more and better staff officers. While there are many exceptional officers in Europe, their numbers were too small to meet the requirements of even this limited operation. Operation Unified Protector exposed a widespread deficiency in the professional knowledge of field-grade European officers. Professional military education (PME) is the place where that knowledge is developed and so that is where corrective Alliance action must focus.

The difficulty is that PME is a national responsibility and it primarily serves national purposes. Furthermore, most European PME systems have been preoccupied with converging with their national systems of higher education as part of the Bologna Process. These domestic initiatives have diffused any momentum for international harmonization within PME. But now that domestic convergence is complete in most European states, international harmonization can commence.

Solutions could be sought at the level of the Alliance. NATO possesses two PME institutions that are clearly relevant to this situation, the NATO Defence College and the NATO School at Oberammergau, but neither possesses the capacity to appropriately educate and train the officer corps of European NATO nations, even if most were willing to delegate this task to them.[9] Rather, improvement of PME is more likely if undertaken by is small groups of strategically proximate states that commit to one another that they will together adopt reforms to increase the ability of their officers to conduct international military operations.

The Nordic countries—Norway, Denmark, Sweden, and Finland—present just such a model of cooperation.[10] They have cooperated in peacekeeping operations and conducted joint training courses for military and civilian personnel for decades under the banners of NORDSAMFN and NORDCAPS.[11] Under the NORDEFCO framework,[12] they have formed a working group to further develop such “common courses for common purposes.”[13] Now that all but Denmark have completed their Bologna reforms they are considering ways to facilitate cooperation in the education of the field-grade officers that would populate the staff of any future NATO-led expeditionary operation.

We use the Nordic case to consider how strategically proximate groups of NATO allies can cooperate to overcome the dearth of qualified staff officers across the Alliance. We first discuss professional military education in general, the measures that have been undertaken thus far by NORDECO to increase cooperation in PME, and the substantial barriers that exist to systematic cooperation in their command and staff courses. We then consider the principles adopted to further European cooperation in civilian higher education and suggest the areas where they apply to PME. We then consider three alternative paths that increased cooperation in PME at the level of the command and staff course could take: a Nordic Defence College, standardized national command and staff courses, and a core curriculum of common courses for common purposes. We conclude with a discussion of how the Alliance can facilitate clusters of cooperation between strategically proximate groups of Allies to improve their number of knowledgeable and skilled staff officers.

A National Affair

Professional Military Education

The military is a profession that utilizes specialized knowledge with regard to the use of force to achieve the purposes of the state. Military officers are the possessors of this specialized and esoteric knowledge. At the highest levels, it is their job to advise political leaders as to the wisdom of using military force in particular ways to achieve particular objectives. At middle levels, it is their job to manage, lead, and command military personnel in the use of violence as well as ancillary functions. Finally, at lower levels, it is their job to utilize violence with skill and discrimination to achieve tactical objectives on the battlefield. Professional military education is an integral part of the development of military officers. It expands their knowledge and ability to exercise judgment so as to carry out these tasks competently.

Professional military education is a mix of higher education and vocational-technical training. Over the course of their careers, officers undergo training to develop the skills necessary to perform practical tasks at the tactical level. They also undertake education to develop the knowledge and intellectual acumen to command, lead, and manage their subordinates as well as to advise their superiors in the chain of command as to the most appropriate course of action. This developmental process is usually quite explicit, with particular training and educational objectives tied to specific assignments, career progression, and promotion. Moreover, as with most professions, there is a general consistency across borders, with the body of skills and knowledge to be mastered reflecting the tasks that these professionals undertake at different levels of responsibility albeit in a national context.

PME takes place at four levels: at the undergraduate level where cadets are prepared to be commissioned as officers, a specialty phase where officers focus on a functional specialization and small unit leadership, an intermediate level where officers transition from being technically proficient in their specialty to being proficient at command and staff processes, and a senior level where officers transition to being strategic thinkers. Each level addresses different needs of the profession. Pre-commissioning PME introduces a large number of students to the military profession, educates them in national issues and processes, socializes them into military culture, and molds them into loyal agents that are licensed to command others to use violence on behalf of the state. Such education lasts 3-4 years. The specialty phase produces tactically proficient junior officers and company-grade leaders and last 3-6 months. Intermediate PME at the command and staff level develops a smaller number of officers who have been promoted to field-grade ranks and have been selected for further development. These officers form the middle management of the military and are educated for 10-24 months. Senior PME at the war college level develops an even smaller cadre of officers to become senior leaders of their services and interact with civilian policy makers at the highest levels. Such courses last 1-3 years.

The potential for international cooperation in PME increases across these levels. Pre-commissioning education at the undergraduate level is the state’s primary opportunity to indoctrinate future officers to be loyal and to introduce them to the national system of government, military procedures, and other topics specially geared toward the home state. Institutions in other states cannot meet these needs. At the specialty level, many technical aspects are common enough to permit cooperation: maintenance of common vehicles and airframes and individual proficiency in the use of common weapon systems have been pursued for many years.[14] Other aspects, such as small unit operations and leadership, depend upon national doctrine and command structures and therefore are less amenable to international cooperation.

At the command and staff college level, higher education in military science is combined with training in staff processes and leadership skills for mid-career officers. It is designed to foster critical thinking skills as well as impart particular knowledge. The typical curriculum is divided into military theory and history, international politics, national decision-making, leadership, and joint military operations, perhaps supplemented with elective courses, a war-gaming exercise, and a thesis. Much of this curriculum is (and should) be geared toward orienting officers toward multinational, coalition, and Alliance policies, procedures, and practices at the operational level. Active learning through seminars fosters a mixture of higher and vocational-technical education. The seminar environment replicates small unit dynamics and larger exercises emphasize group coordination, management, and leadership. The hybrid curriculum socializes a cohort of officers and builds their informal connections, and can educate them broadly for the second half of their careers where they assume management roles in military organizations numbering in the hundreds or thousands. Given that most European nations cannot operate alone, much can be achieved in a multinational environment.

The war college level expands military science to the “strategic level” of national policy. It aims to produce senior military (and some civilian) leaders who are “nimble-minded, creative, and knowledgeable experts in service, joint, and national security affairs” that are able to “effectively bridge the gap between virtuosity in operations and the achievement of policy objectives.”[15] International considerations loom large in the curriculum and the ability to develop arguments, analyze complex policy issues, and communicate effectively orally and in writing are essential to this level of education. Multinational cooperation at this level also has much to commend it, particularly as there are a limited number of senior-level programs in Europe.

Multinational Educational Cooperation

NORDEFCO Cooperation

Nordic cooperation in education and training dates back to 1965 when “the Nordics set up a joint UN training program for officers and non-commissioned officers…. The 1973 programme consisted of UN observer courses hosted by Sweden and Finland, a UN staff course hosted by Sweden, a course for movement control personnel hosted by Norway, a military police course hosted by Denmark and a logistic officers course hosted by Norway.” Later a Nordic seminar on UN peacekeeping operations for civil servants and field-grade officers was added.[16] These courses grew to 25 in 2003 and were attended by 850 students that year.[17] Currently under NORDEFCO,[18] Denmark offers training courses for military police and in civil-military cooperation (CIMIC). Finland offers training to be a military observer, liaison officer, and military advisor as well as in communications. Norway offers courses in UN and NATO logistics and support. And Sweden officers a host of courses in civil-military relations, gender issues, international police, generating lessons learned, operational planning, and brigade and battalion level staff officer processes in different types of multinational environments.[19] These courses are taught in English and open to international personnel. In 2008, “some 900 students” were trained in the various courses, 300 of which were not Nordic.[20]

Since 2009, NORDEFCO has focused on developing “common courses for common purposes”[21] that supplement specialty training. In 2013, they offered twenty week-long training courses for personnel deploying to multinational assignments in partner capacity building or low intensity stabilization and training missions under the auspices of NATO’s Partnership for Peace program or the United Nations.[22] Furthermore, a working group has identified language courses (English, Pashto, and Farsi), technical courses in aircraft maintenance, combat medical courses for special forces personnel, mine counter-measures, and logistics as areas with “good potential for further cooperation” in training and education.[23] The working group has even indicated that “common competent bod[ies] for recognition [and] certifying staff” should be pursued to ensure quality.[24] Such language indicates that the countries of NORDEFCO can do more and, importantly, desire to do more to cooperate.